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Journal Article

Citation

Goodman ML, Gutarra C, Billingsley KM, Keiser PH, Gitari S. Anxiety Stress Coping 2017; 30(4): 469-483.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/10615806.2016.1271876

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Background and objective: We explore whether perceived stress among Kenyan mothers is predicted by childhood exposure to emotional abuse - both witnessed among parents and experienced directly. Further, we explore whether this association is mediated by social support, family functioning and polygynous marriage.

DESIGN: We used cross-sectional data from a systematic random sample (n = 1974) of mothers in semi-rural Kenya.

METHODS: Data were collected using validated scales and trained interviewers. Analyses were conducted using bootstrapped structural equation models and fixed-effects linear regression models, controlling for age and household wealth.

RESULTS: Reported experience of emotional abuse - both directly experienced and observed among household adults - was high in the present population (72.5% and 69%, respectively). Perceived stress among women was significantly higher if they were exposed to more emotional abuse during childhood (p <.001). Lower social support, worse family functioning and higher rates of polygynous marriage mediated pathways between emotional abuse exposure during childhood and adult perceived stress.

CONCLUSION: Future research should investigate whether social integration, identity formation and self-esteem underlie observed dynamics in sub-Saharan Africa. Efforts to promote social integration and support should target children currently experiencing emotional abuse, and may include child-targeted high quality television programing and adult-targeted media and celebrity campaigns.


Language: en

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